Montreal Gazette

Experts urge better tracking of seniors’ deaths in care facilities

RESIDENTS ATTACKED by those suffering from dementia

- DOUGLAS QUAN

One day last June, staff at a Kamloops, B.C., nursing home found resident Jack Shippoboth­am, 79, lying on the floor with a broken nose, hip and pelvis.

He had wandered into the room of a fellow resident who, according to Shippoboth­am’s family, had a history of being “territoria­l.”

Shippoboth­am, who suffered from dementia, later told his family that “Big Foot had come down on his face.” Shippoboth­am made defensive motions with his arms to describe the attack, recalled his daughter, Moneca Jantzen.

Three weeks later, Shippoboth­am died of complicati­ons from his injuries, his family said.

Across Canada, reports of seniors being fatally attacked in care facilities, and dementia sufferers wandering away from nursing homes, have spurred calls to better track similar incidents, and to act on inquest recommenda­tions that could prevent future tragedies among older, or mentally ill, people.

Susan Eng, vice-president of advocacy for the Canadian Associatio­n of Retired Persons, said she’s troubled by the spate of fatal attacks on residents at nursing homes by other residents, usually suffering from dementia.

“The nursing homes freely admit that they are not wellequipp­ed to deal with the increasing incidence of mental illness among their intake population,” Eng told Postmedia News. “The specialize­d training has not been adequately funded and the regulatory requiremen­ts have not kept pace with the need.”

Eng wants a database created to track recommenda­tions nationwide f rom inquests and inquiries probing the deaths of seniors.

Nursing homes need to be held to account when a tragedy occurs. But provinces also need to conduct systemic reviews, either by reviewing all or a random set of deaths in nursing homes, she argued.

Shippoboth­am’s alleged assailant, a 71-year-old resident, later died. Shippoboth­am’s daughter still has questions, such as whether improved security at the Overlander Residentia­l Care facility might have prevented the attack.

“I think we also need to look at how we’re ‘warehousin­g’ our elders,” Jantzen said in an email to Postmedia News. “Do we have enough staff and with the right combinatio­n of skills

“The regulatory requiremen­ts have not kept pace with the need.”

SUSAN ENG

and qualificat­ions? Placement of people is critical so assessment­s need to be completed. And if and when someone changes and becomes violent, they need to have a reasonable solution for that.”

Just weeks after that incident, William May, an 85-yearold resident at the Polson Residentia­l Care facility in Vernon, B.C., died after an assault.

His 94-year-old roommate, John Furman, was charged with second-degree murder, but the Crown stayed the charge because of Furman’s advanced dementia.

Both cases are now being reviewed to see if they warrant an inquest or deeper examinatio­n by a death-review panel, says the British Columbia Coroners Service.

A pair of attacks in the Toronto area last year triggered similar alarms.

Francisco DaSilva, 87, was found dead at the Castleview Wychwood Towers nursing home in November with “obvious injuries to the head,” police said. His roommate, 81-year-old Francesco Greco, was charged with seconddegr­ee murder.

Earlier, 72-year-old Joyce- lyn Dickson was found dead at the Wexford Residence long-term care facility in March, beaten with a cane. Another resident, 72-year-old Peter Brooks, was charged with second-degree murder.

The homicides prompted the Ontario Nurses’ Associatio­n to call on the province to act on key recommenda­tions from a previous inquest — held in 2005 into the deaths of two residents at the Casa Verde Health Centre in Toronto.

Piara Singh Sandhu, 74, had been at the facility less than a day when he used a piece of metal to attack EzzEl-Dine El-Roubi, 71, and Pedro Lopez, 83. Sandhu, who suffered from dementia and had a history of aggression, was charged with two counts of second-degree murder but died in custody.

An inquest jury delivered 85 recommenda­tions. It said the province should give “increased priority” to ensuring nursing homes have proper funding and standards to manage residents with cognitive impairment­s; that people who are considered a risk to themselves or others should not be admitted into any facility until they have been assessed and a care plan developed; and that the province should create specialize­d facilities and units to care for residents with behavioura­l problems.

Citing the Sandhu case, Ontario’s geriatric and longterm-care review committee warned in a 2011 report that as a result of Canada’s aging population, long-term-care homes were becoming the new “mental health institutio­ns.”

“Safety of current and future residents will continue to be at risk without the appropriat­e and prompt developmen­t of comprehens­ive plans and protocols for the management” of dementia sufferers, the report said.

It’s expected more than 1.4 million Canadians will have dementia by 2031, up from 750,000 today. The Canadian Medical Associatio­n last year called for a national strat- egy on dementia.

Meanwhile, advocates are also calling attention to the growing problem of seniors who simply wander away from care homes.

Last month, the body of 76-year-old Joan Warren was found by a hiker in the Lynn Canyon area of North Vancouver. She had walked away from the Sunrise of Lynn Valley long-term-care facility in sub-zero temperatur­es.

A similar incident several years ago in Alberta prompted a fatality inquiry, but many of the recommenda­tions have not been acted on. On the morning of Dec. 31, 2007, staff at the View Holiday Retirement Home in Lethbridge, Alta., noticed that 88-year-old resident Sydney Salter was missing at breakfast. His body was discovered in the parking lot about 100 metres away from the facility, and was covered by a small amount of fresh snow.

Salter, who suffered from dementia and had a history of wandering at night, was barefoot and dressed only in light pants and a shirt. It was -15 C that morning.

After a two-day fatality inquiry, provincial Judge Ronald Jacobson recommende­d in September 2009 that the province’s health ministry bring together health profession­als, health-care providers and other experts for an independen­t study to determine the best short- and long-term care for people with dementia, Alzheimer’s and other “cognitive impairment­s.”

The study, the judge said, should examine the needs of “wanderers” and the use of GPS-monitoring devices.

The study should also review communicat­ions systems to ensure that whenever a marked change occurs in a patient’s health, all healthcare providers and family members are notified immediatel­y.

Signalling the urgency of the matter, the judge recommende­d that findings be published by Jan. 31, 2010.

Haydon Dewes, a spokes- man for Alberta Health Services, said a study was conducted but it was an “internal report” and not published. He could not say why the study was not published.

At the time the judge’s report came out, health officials said the province was working on a “dementia strategy.” Four years later, the strategy is still being developed.

“Have we developed a provincial dementia strategy? No, we have not,” said Brenda Huband, interim CEO of clinical operations for Alberta Health Services. But Huband said the province has introduced a number of measures that are “well-aligned” with concerns raised at the inquiry and that will eventually form part of a dementia strategy.

After assessing the ethical implicatio­ns, early this year Alberta Health Services will roll out pilot tests of locator technology on patients at risk of wandering.

Health officials are also working with dementia-care experts on ways to reduce the use of anti-psychotic medication­s, which can have serious side-effects.

The province has also been providing specialty training to continuing-care and acutecare staff for dealing with dementia patients.

Ruth Adria, spokeswoma­n for Elder Advocates of Alberta Society, said while fatality inquiries in Alberta have done a good job of exposing problems in elder care, the province has done a “very poor” job of following up on recommenda­tions.

“The whole process is just posturing. As soon as it finishes, there’s no considerat­ion given” to recommenda­tions, she said.

“We have very little confidence in the system.”

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? The Canadian Associatio­n of Retired Persons is calling for the creation of a national database to track all the recommenda­tions from inquests and inquiries into the deaths of seniors.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES The Canadian Associatio­n of Retired Persons is calling for the creation of a national database to track all the recommenda­tions from inquests and inquiries into the deaths of seniors.
 ?? POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? A 74-year-old man with dementia was charged with second-degree murder after a fatal attack on two residents in 2005 at the Casa Verde Health Centre in Toronto, above.
POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES A 74-year-old man with dementia was charged with second-degree murder after a fatal attack on two residents in 2005 at the Casa Verde Health Centre in Toronto, above.
 ??  ?? Jack Shippoboth­am
Jack Shippoboth­am
 ??  ?? Joan Warren
Joan Warren

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